More than 500 refugee kids still in detention

February 17, 2012
Issue 
A protest last year outside Melbourne's Broadmeadows detention centre, which holds about 140 refugee minors. Photo: Indymedia.or

The federal immigration department has drawn sharp criticism from refugee advocacy groups and Amnesty International for denying that refugee children continue to be held in detention.

After Perth refugee activists visited the remote Leonora detention centre and reports emerged that children had been locked up for more than 12 months, the immigration department’s media manager, Sandi Logan, said on Twitter: “Misinformation about kids in detention centres is unhelpful, disingenuous.

“As you know, kids are NOT detained in centres.”

The government said in October 2010 it would move “the majority” of children and vulnerable families into community-based accommodation while their refugee claims were assessed. In July last year, the immigration department said it had “delivered on its commitment”.

But January 31 figures from the immigration department showed that of 1079 asylum seeker children held by the immigration department, only 551 were living in the community under residence determination.

More than 500 refugees under 18 are now held in what the immigration department has named “alternative places of detention” (APOD). These are defined by the Human Rights Commission as “low security immigration detention facilities”, where people “remain under supervision” and “are not free to come and go”.

But it is not “detention”, the immigration department says.

Facilities like Leonora detention centre, the Darwin Aiport Lodge and the “Construction Camp” on Phosphate Hill on Christmas Island have been named APODs.

The Perth-based Refugee Rights Action Nework (RRAN) visited Leonora over January 26-29. The camp is a cluster of demoutables surrounded by a fence and hundreds of kilometres of desert. The drive from Perth to the town, population about 1400, takes 12 hours.

About 140-160 unaccompanied minors and families with young children are held there. RRAN said children “were not attending school outside the detention facility ... [and] children had minimal excursions outside”.

Despite private-security firm Serco trying to prevent any visits to refugees inside, RRAN saw many teenagers behind several fences. They were eventually able to meet about 40 children, all of who had been in detention for more than a year.

RRAN said one 17-year-old Hazara refugee “has been in detention for two years”.

After visiting the centre last year, the Human Right Commission said in a report: “It is not an appropriate place to hold families with children in detention, particularly for long periods of time.

“The outdoor heat is often extreme, and there is a limited amount of grassy and shaded space inside the facility. A number of the outdoor areas consist only of red dirt. Parents raised concerns about the safety and wellbeing of their young children in this hot and dusty environment.

“Parents said there were not enough indoor areas for their young children to play away from the heat and dirt.”

The Darwin Airport Lodge, in stark comparison, is a hotel-style form of detention. The immigration department has not published any figures for it, but the Darwin Asylum Seeker Support and Advocacy Network (DASSAN) estimates about 170 children, many without families, are held there.

The February 10 Adelaide Now said the department of immigration moved 28 young Vietnamese refugees — including a seven-year-old girl and her 17-year-old sister — from residential housing in Port Augusta to the Darwin Airport Lodge on February 5.

Adelaide Now said: “The detainees were only told about the shock move less than 24 hours earlier, denying them the chance to say goodbye to regular visitors who offered them friendship as they waited in detention for asylum.”

ChilOut’s Sophie Peer told ABC radio’s AM they had been in detention for nine months – moved from Christmas Island, to South Australia's Port Augusta and now Darwin. “We cannot fathom how it’s in the best interests of a seven-year-old child to lock them up for nine months.”

The Darwin Airport Lodge holds asylum seekers as well as visa-overstayers, some “illegal” workers bound for deportation and accused “people smugglers”. Asylum seekers have witnessed a spate of suicide attempts and self-harm, including the attempted suicide on February 15 of a Tamil man whose visa was cancelled the day before he was due to be moved into the community.

The man tried to hang himself with a bedsheet and was cut down by other refugees.

On February 9, DASSAN referred the newly arrived Vietnamese children to the Northern Territory Child Protection Services due to its fears they were at risk. The group said it knew of “children in the Darwin Airport Lodge that have self harmed and are on medication as a result of their incarceration”.

ChilOut has described the Phosphate Hill detention facility, near the Christmas Island township and away from the maximum-security North West Point detention centre, as a “densely packed collection of demountables knowns as dongas” that holds almost 400 asylum seekers.

Dongas are shipping containers refurbished for single-person sleeping quarters. The immigration department bought up many unused dongas from the NT intervention, which were a failed form of housing in Aboriginal communities.

ChilOut said “families of four” have been housed in them.

At another APOD, in Inverbrackie, South Australia, at least five children have been born, ChilOut said

Child psychiatrist Dr Jon Jureidini treated a suicidal teen there and told the Adelaide Advertiser the children in Inverbrackie were “the saddest kids I’ve seen”. The Advertiser said there were at least five cases of self-harm.

Every APOD under the department of immigration is a closed, secure facility, run and guarded by private-prison firm Serco. Asylum seekers are restricted to the centre grounds almost all the time.

Logan is not telling the truth when he says no children are in detention. Bureaucrats may change the names, definitions and jargon and sometimes the facilities are improved or made more comfortable. But the terrible effects on human lives are the same, whatever you call them.


Comments

Shame you either fail to let the facts get in the way of your story, or simply make it up as you go! DIAC has never (repeat never) said children are not in immigration detention; what we have steadfastly maintained is we do not detain them minors in (adult) detention centres, but rather in low-security facilities such as alternative places of detention (APODS) the likes of which include the Inverbrackie APOD (a community in the Adelaide Hills), the Leonora APOD, the Darwin Airport Lodge (DAL) APOD, the Construction Camp APOD and so on. There are no "illegal workers" or visa overstayers detained in the DAL. Your source is wrong. The group moved from the Port Augusta immigration residential housing facility to the DAL in Darwin comprised both children and adults, and not only children. Again, your source (mainstream media it seems) is wrong. The group unfortunately has been at risk owing to escapes and attempted escapes involving, it is believed, help from members of communities whose intentions were less than honourable. We have a strong commitment to the duty of care we must exercise ensuring the safety and security of all of our clients, be they in detention, in the community, crossing our borders, or seeking visas to enter Australia. If your argument is with the policy of mandatory detention, or of any immigration detention whatsoever, this is a matter in a democracy which you and your supporters are rightfully entitled to agitate. But agitate those directly involved in the democracy making the policy decisions! Departmental staff, and their contracted service providers perform professionally and empathetically delivering programs and undertaking tasks which are consistent with the policies of the government of the day. After all, people are our business.
The comment previously posted is from Sandi Logan, NatComms Mngr, DIAC, Canberra.
Well on the point in your second paragraph: QUOTE: immigration department’s media manager, Sandi Logan, said on Twitter: “Misinformation about kids in detention centres is unhelpful, disingenuous. “As you know, kids are NOT detained in centres.” ENDQUOTE So it seems your argument is with you own media manager rather than the author of this article.
Oh anonymous..didn't you READ Sandi Logan's statement? RRAN witnessed, on several occasions guards referring to children by number not by name....when a complaint about this behavior was expressed by RRAN to center manager Steve he smirked and said he didn't care. I suspect you have not been out to this internment camp...I have. Three times. CHILDREN. LOCKED UP. IN THE DESERT. disgusting conditions and Serco staff that appear to be only capable of telling the most absurd lies.
I agree with they are so professional as a profit-company which deploys racist staffs and indirectly victimizing the vulnerable refugee asylumseekers. what about Iranian beaten up in NIDC on 10 Feb 2012 and what kind of investigation takes for a week? Why AFP so lazy in this time when charges laid on 3 Burmeses on 12 Aug 2011 was within hours. How professional is Serco manager's statement describes asylumseekers as 'illegal immigrants'. I also agree with their consistency of working together which cover-up reality of ongoing crisis in side detentions by misclaiming privacy, security and welfare. Then, why not it acts to frank to the public about the system of oppressions and amount of benifit per year? Make and stay rich by doing oppressions and monopolizing over vulnerable people!! Shame yourself for claiming 'commonwealth company and staffs'.
"There are no "illegal workers" or visa overstayers detained in the DAL. Your source is wrong." My source: http://www.newsroom.immi.gov.au/media_releases/989 Immigration media release 30 Nov 2011: "Those detained are being transferred to the Northern Immigration Detention Centre (NIDC) and the Darwin Airport Lodge (DAL)." Jay Fletcher

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